© Copyright Hugh Mortimer and licensed for
reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
In days of old there could be
found many hundreds of institutions known as ‘alehouses’ scattered across the
nation, which were essentially domestic dwellings that brewed and served ale.
In time, of course, there developed the traditional ‘pub’ as we know it –
commercial institutions specialising in the boozing business – and the basic
alehouses fell from use.
Most alehouses didn’t really have
proper serving bars; folk just turned up and bought their beer from the house
owner/tenant. Across the UK today there are less than ten such survivals from
the distant past – and one of them is the Milbank
Arms, Barningham, on the Co.Durham side of its border with North Yorkshire.
It looks like a regular public
house from the outside, but on entering you are faced with little in the way of
pub-like options. The landlord will be there waiting for you at the top of the
cellar steps, and he will fulfil your request by scampering down to, and up
from, the cellar. And if you’re interested, there are plenty of fancy cocktails
to choose from, too (their speciality, in fact), and the cellar stairs are
adorned with thousands of miniature bottles.
There is a small tap room for visitors to down their drinks,
actually, as well as a seldom used ‘domino room’. It is on the Campaign
for Real Ale’s National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors – and quite
right, too.
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